Most of the settlement will be provided through services with the company shelling out $367,000 in cash.

State Superintendent Janet Barresi said the company will provide instructional supports, professional development, voluntary benchmark assessments and reimburse districts for the extra costs associated with the outage.

The company will spend $125,000 for technology readiness assessments and $13,000 to make teachers more familiar with types of questions that will appear on English and math tests.

Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt has asked to review the settlement agreement before it goes into effect.